Proportion (%) of people with childcare responsibilities that relied on external support during and before the pandemic, by type of support eige_covid_chldc_ben__covid_chld_support

Time format:
Years
Unit:
Percentage (comparable)
Description:

This indicator shows the extent to which women and men with childcare responsibilities were reliant on external support both during and before the pandemic, disaggregated by type of support.

It is based on the question: “How often do you rely on the following external services and resources for childcare? 1. Daycare centre/school (also if with reduced offer/online format), 2. After-school programme(s) and other extracurricular activities, 3. Nanny or babysitter, 4. Nurse or social worker, 5. Grandparents or other relatives, 6. Other adults (neighbours, friends, parents from child’s school or daycare …)?”.

Respondents were asked to indicate how much each measure impacted their unpaid care burden, ranging from “greatly reduced” to “greatly increased”. Valid response were grouped into the three categories:

  • Reduced or greatly reduced my unpaid care burden
  • Had no effect
  • Increased or greatly increased my care burden

More information on the methodological aspects of EIGE’s survey ‘Gender Equality and Socio-Economic Consequences of Covid-19 crisis’ can be obtained in the technical report.

Keywords:
child care, child care-related, childcare, childcare services, childcare-related, covid, covid-19, pandemic
EU27_2020
BE
BG
CZ
DK
DE
EE
IE
EL
ES
FR
HR
IT
CY
LV
LT
LU
HU
MT
NL
AT
PL
PT
RO
SI
SK
FI
SE
2021
EU27_2020
66.1
BE
65.1
BG
65.1
CZ
67
DK
66.6
DE
67.8
EE
56.8
IE
54.3
EL
75.2
ES
73.3
FR
56.2
HR
73.4
IT
66.6
CY
76.6
LV
63.3
LT
64.2
LU
62.4
HU
67.2
MT
62.5
NL
59.4
AT
60.6
PL
69.6
PT
68.8
RO
64.1
SI
67.3
SK
70.4
FI
71.4
SE
67.6

Available flags:

b break in time series c confidential
d definition differs, see metadata e estimated
f forecast i see metadata
m imputed n not significant
p provisional r revised
s Eurostat estimate u low reliability
x dropped due to insufficient sample size y unreliable due to small sample size
z not applicable